WARSAW—Poland and Lithuania are in talks with Ukraine to have the war-torn country export its summer grain harvest through their ports, circumventing Russia’s naval blockade in the Black Sea and helping relieve what the United Nations predicts to be the worst global food crisis since World War II.

The plans, described in an interview by Poland’s President Andrzej Duda and several Polish, Lithuanian and Ukrainian officials and diplomats, are an attempt to bolster Ukraine’s struggling economy, which depends heavily on exports of wheat, mostly harvested in late summer. Russia’s military has besieged the now desolate port of Mariupol and its navy has blocked access to the Black Sea lanes to other ports, like Odessa.

To Read the Full Story

This post first appeared on wsj.com

You May Also Like

Utah ski resort employee dies after tree severs chairlift cable

A 29-year-old Utah man died Monday after a fallen tree damaged the…

How Consumers React When They Buy an Item on Back-Order

Journal Reports: Leadership Everybody Talks About Made in America. But It Isn’t…

5 children among 10 dead in France apartment fire

At least ten people, including five children, were killed after a fire…

NASA’s Mars rover Perseverance successfully touches down on the red planet

NASA kicked off a new era of Mars exploration Thursday with the…